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Picture 5
From The Photographic History of the Civil War, Volume
5, Forts and Artillery (pages 184-185).
Click on the right or left sides of the picture
for a larger view of each half.
"The 17,000 pound mortar, "Dictator," was run on a flat-car
from point to point on a curve of the railroad track along the bank of the
Appomattox. It was manned and served before Petersburg, July 9-31, 1864,
by Company G, First Connecticut Artillery, during its stay. When its charge
of fourteen pounds of powder was first fired, the car broke under the shock;
but a second car was prepared by the engineers, strengthened by additional
beams, tied strongly by iron rods and covered with iron-plating. This enabled
the "Dictator" to be used at various points, and during the siege
it fired in all forty-five rounds--nineteen of which were fired during the
battle of the Crater. It was given at last a permanent emplacement near
Battery No. 4."
Original caption from The Photographic History of the Civil War, Volume
5, Forts and Artillery edited by Francis Trevelyan Miller and published
in 1911 (pages 184-185).
Picture 6

From Mathew Brady Photographs of Civil War-Era Personalities
and Scenes, National Archives at College Park, MD
Click on the picture for a larger view
"'Dictator'--The Traveling Mortar In Front Of Petersburg, 1864
This is the 13-inch mortar, a 200-pound exploding shell from which threw
a Confederate field-piece and its carriage above its parapet, at a range
of nearly two miles. The 17,000 pounds of this mortar made it difficult
to move, so it was mounted on an ordinary railroad-car strengthened by additional
beams, and placed on top with iron. This engine of destruction was run down
on the Petersburg & City Point Railroad to a point near the Union lines,
where a curve in the track made it easy to change the direction of the fire.
The recoil from a charge of fourteen pounds of powder shifted the mortar
less than two feet on the car, which moved a dozen feet on the track. Even
the full charge of twenty pounds of powder could be used without damage
to the axles of the car. This mortar, whose shell could crush and explode
any ordinary field-magazine, terrorized the Confederate gunners, and succeeded
in silencing their enfolding batteries on Chesterfield Heights. The activities
of this great war machine were directed by Colonel H. L. Abbott, of the
First Connecticut Heavy Artillery."
Original caption from The Photographic History of the Civil War, Volume
3, The Decisive Battles edited by Francis Trevelyan Miller and published
in 1911 (page 51).
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